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Re: [lojban] Knowledge (was: Random lojban questions/annoyances




la camgusmis cusku di'e

I'm not answering that question until and unless someone tells me how
having djuno require truth would work in practice.

Pretty much like English "knows" works in practice.
{djuno} does not "require" truth any more than {jetnu} does.

Given:

la stiv djuno le du'u do cribe

and assuming you are not a (Koala) bear, how do you correct the speaker,
since the speaker has, by definition, stated a truth, since djuno can
only talk about truths!

How do you correct a speaker who states {jetnu fa le du'u do cribe}?

It is the same situation. Neither the use of {djuno} nor of {jetnu}
entails that the speaker is stating a truth.

And what if you hear Steve say:

mi djuno le du'u do cribe

how do you correct him?

i do srera i mi na cribe

And once you've done so, since djuno only talks about facts, does that
mean that Steve can no longer say

mi pu djuno le du'u do cribe

He can't truthfully say that if he accepts my correction and
now knows that I'm not a bear. He has to accept that his previous
statement was false, no big deal. That does not mean he was being
dishonest, it only means he was wrong.

And if he can't say that, that would be rather disturbing, since it's
certainly _true_ that he used to know that; he stated his knowledge
earlier!

No, what is true is that he thought he knew that. He stated what
he though his knowledge was. He can now say:

mi pu jinvi le du'u do djuno le du'u do cribe

Very much like in English: "I thought you were a bear"
and not "I knew you were a bear".

co'o mi'e xorxes




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